In their own words: How the legendary 2003 NBA draft shaped basketball's future - ESPN
There aren't many things in professional sports that live up to the hype. The 2003 NBA draft was one of them.
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There aren't many things in professional sports that live up to the hype. The 2003 NBA draft was one of them.
LOS ANGELES — With the retirement of Carmelo Anthony, LeBron James is the lone member of the 2003 draft class in the league, and he’s still going strong. LeBron remains one of the top 10-15 players in the NBA — he made Third Team All-NBA this season — and can summon up epic efforts like the 31-point first half he put together Monday night in the Western Conference Finals.
Carmelo Anthony announced his retirement from the NBA on Monday after 19 years in the league. After a career with the Denver Nuggets, New York Knicks, Oklahoma City Thunder, Houston Rockets, Portland Trail Blazers and Los Angeles Lakers, the 10-time NBA All-Star will go down as one of the best scorers of his era.
For 19 seasons, Carmelo Anthony was among the greatest bucket-getters the NBA has ever seen.
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Carmelo Anthony, the star forward who led Syracuse to an NCAA championship in his lone college season and went on to spend 19 years in the NBA, announced his retirement on Monday.
Carmelo Anthony has retired from the NBA, ending his 19-year career as the league's ninth all-time leading scorer.
Top 10 senior Mackenzie Mgbako, who decommitted from Duke last month, announced Friday he will play for Indiana this season.